Korean J Biol Psychiatry.  2009 Dec;16(4):238-345.

The Characteristics of Visuospatial Working Memory in Alzheimer's Disease

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neuropsychiatry, Kyung Hee University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
  • 2Department of Psychology, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Korea.
  • 3Department of Psychiatry, Seoul National University, College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. benji@snu.ac.kr

Abstract


OBJECTIVES
Mild Alzheimer's disease(AD) is uncertain to be related to visuospatial working memory subsystem dysfunction. We used the self ordered pointing test(SOPT) to find the characteristics of visuospatial working memory in mild AD.
METHODS
We compared the visuospatial working memory abilities of 20 patients with mild AD and 20 normal elderly controls(NC) using SOPT, of which stimuli consisted of two stimuli types(A: abstract, C: concrete) and two stimuli numbers(8 and 12). Therefore, working memory was tested using C8, C12, A8, and A12 stimuli conditions in SOPT. Mixed-model ANOVA was conducted with the AD and NC groups as between-subjects factor, with stimuli types and stimuli numbers as the within-subjects factors and with SOPT error rates as the dependent variable.
RESULTS
The AD group showed higher error rates in SOPT than the NC group. The NC group showed low error rates in concrete stimuli than in abstract stimuli and in small stimuli numbers than in large stimuli numbers. And the AD group showed no differences between stimuli types or stimuli numbers.
CONCLUSION
AD patients showed a poor performance in visuospatial working memory using concrete stimuli. The result suggests that there is a non-transformation from visual input to phonological working memory in AD. Patients with AD showed a poor performance although in small stimuli number condition of SOPT. It suggests that in AD, visuospatial working memory is not working well although in low central executive loads.

Keyword

Working memory; Alzheimer's disease; SOPT

MeSH Terms

Aged
Alzheimer Disease
Humans
Memory, Short-Term
Full Text Links
  • KJBP
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr